Biv. Boe 06) SMALL SITES ABOUT FORT BERTHOLD—METCALF 39 
points and grooved mauls on the site and reported that one “stone 
mound,” which he had dug into, had yielded scraps of bone. 
32WI2 (map 1).—This site, which is located on an upland bluff on 
the left side of Crazymans Coulee in the S1% sec. 33, T. 154 N., R. 100 
W., consists of a dozen circular arrangements of small boulders strung 
out along the bluff edge for a distance of one-quarter mile. Some are 
single rings of large stones, others are made up of several rows of small 
stones. Many of them are in an excellent state of preservation. Tests 
were uniformly negative, and only a few flint chips were found on the 
surface by the survey party. 
32WTI4 (map 1).—A site consisting of six circles of small boulders 
and two small cairns is present in the N14 sec. 6, T. 153 N., R. 99 W., 
on top of Medicine Lodge Hill, the highest hill in the vicinity. Seat- 
tered about this rather compact site were many flint chips as well as an 
end scraper, a sherd, modified flakes, and a glass bead. All tests, how- 
ever, were negative. A local collector in Williston, N. Dak., has found 
projectile points at this site and reports having excavated a burial, but 
no data are available on either the burial or the point types. 
32WI5 (map 1).—F ive well-defined circles of small boulders and 
limestone slabs, located in an area measuring 200 by 60 feet, constitute 
this site. The circles, which vary from 12 to 60 feet in diameter, are 
found on the second terrace on the left bank of a small tributary of the 
Missouri River. The site is 18 miles southeast of Williston, N. Dak., in 
the NEY, sec. 3, T. 153 N., R. 98 W. All tests were negative, and no 
material was found on the surface. The variation in the size of the 
circles at this site seems particularly noteworthy. 
I2ZWI9 (map 1).—Scattered for a quarter of a mile along a high 
ridge which thrusts out into the valley of the Missouri west of Baldwin 
Creek, in the W1% sec. 11, T. 154 N., R. 97 W., are 10 stone circles. 
They vary in diameter from 10 to 30 feet, and openings are present in 
the southwest part of the rings. Small rock mounds occur on the left 
side of four circles. The rings are in native sod, and more may have 
been present in the cultivated field adjacent to the north. No material 
was found on the surface, and tests in and about the rings were, as is 
generally the case in this area, uniformly negative. 
32WI10 (map 1).—In the NEY, sec. 3, T. 153 N., R. 98 W., about 
a mile north of the Missouri River, on the west side of Long Creek, are 
two small knolls. Six boulder circles are present on one of them, 
while two are on the other. At least two of the eight rings show gaps 
suggesting entrances on their north sides. Several small rock cairns 
occur among the circles, and one of them was tested by the survey party. 
The landowner is also reported to have tested one of the mounds. 
Nothing was found in either test. Grooved mauls have come from the 
site as surface finds. 
597967—63——_5 
